What are Lightning Talks?

Lightning Talks are sixteen five-minute talks in a ninety-minute
time slot (or eleven in a sixty-minute slot.)

Why Would You Want to do a Lightning Talk?

Maybe you've never given a talk before, and you'd like to start
small. For a Lightning Talk, you don't need to make slides, and if
you do decide to make slides, you only need to make three.

Maybe you're nervous and you're afraid you'll mess up. It's a lot
easier to plan and deliver a five minute talk than it is to deliver a
long talk. And if you do mess up, at least the painful part
will be over quickly.

Maybe you don't have much to say. Maybe you just want to ask a
question, or invite people to help you with your project, or boast
about something you did, or tell a
short cautionary story. These things are all interesting and worth
talking about, but there might not be enough to say about them to fill
up thirty minutes.

Maybe you have a lot of things to say, and you're already going to
give a long talk on one of them, and you don't want to hog the
spotlight. There's nothing wrong with giving several Lightning
Talks. Hey, they're only five minutes.

Why Would You Want to Hear a Lightning Talk?

On the other side, people might want to come to a lightning talk
when they wouldn't come to a long talk on the same subject. The risk
for the attendees is smaller: If the talk turns out to be dull, or if
the person giving the talk turns out to be a really bad speaker, well,
at least it's over in five minutes. With lightning talks, you're
never stuck in some boring lecture for forty-five minutes.

Notice of Intent

A lot of people are not getting the point of these. They hear that
they only get five minutes to speak, and they get all tense. ``How
can I squeeze a whole talk into five minutes?''

No! The point is that because the talk is only five minutes long,
you don't have to take it so seriously. Just try to say something
brief and interesting, and then get out in a hurry. If people want to
follow up or ask questions, they will catch you in the hallway
afterwards.

If I got to schedule eleven talks that were nothing but five
minutes of ranting and raving, I would be really happy.

What can you say in five minutes?

Here are some suggestions:

Why my favorite module is X.

I want to do cool project X. Does anyone want to help?

Successful Project: I did project X. It was a success. Here's how you could benefit.

Failed Project: I did project X. It was a failure, and here's why.

Perl Heresy: People always say X, but they're wrong. Here's why.

You All Suck: Here's what is wrong with the Perl community.

Call to Action: Let's all do more of X / less of X.

A Funny Thing happened to me on the Way to P5P/clpm/PM.

Wouldn't it be cool if X?

Someone needs to do X.

Perl Wish List

Why X was a mistake.

Why X looks like a mistake, but isn't.

What it's like to do X.

Here's a useful technique that worked.

Here's a technique I thought would be useful but didn't work.

Why module X sucks.

Comparison of modules X and Y.

We should be paying more attention to X.

My Favorite Perl Feature

Of course, you can give a talk on anything you want, whether or
not it is on this list.

Someone told me he wanted to do a lightning talk, but couldn't think
of a topic, and asked if I could suggest some topics. So if you want
some suggestions, here is a list of
Perl-related topics.

That Sounds Cool. Sign Me Up!

I am currently accepting proposals for lightning talks for YAPC 2003 in Boca Raton,
Florida. We plan to present 16 lightning talks. If you're
interested, see Instructions for Submitters.

I am also coordinating the lightning talks sessions for the O'Reilly Open Source
Conferences in Portland, Oregon. We will have up to nine tracks
of lightning talks about Apache, Applications, Emerging Topics, MySQL
/ PostGreSQL, Perl, Python, Ruby, and XML. To submit a talk, please
see instructions for submitters.